YEAR ONE OF EPUBLISHING AND THE ART OF OBSESSION by John A. A. Logan
2012
was my first year of epublishing.
I
began it by sending an email to Linda Gillard, whose example had inspired me.
She
kindly replied, offering me welcome advice, which included the suggestion that
I might feel at home in a group called Authors Electric.
I’d
seen the website in 2011, another example which had inspired, so I sent off an
email to AE, giving the same account I had given to Linda Gillard, about my
writing history and experiences with literary agents and publishers over a
number of years.
I
was invited to join AE and, at first, throughout February, I was convinced that
this had happened by accident or misunderstanding.
Yes,
I’d been published by Picador and Vintage, but only single short stories at a
time, never a book.
Yes,
I’d been represented by more than one literary agent over the years, but they
had never succeeded in selling my work!
I
was convinced throughout February, as I waited for my first March 11th
blog slot, that Authors Electric only admitted traditionally published, even
award-winning, authors.
I
knew my March 11th blog would have to be about my novel, The
Survival of Thomas Ford, NOT having been published, despite the support it had
had, from literary agents and film consultants.
So
I expected to be kicked out of Authors Electric on the 11th of March
as soon as I stated publicly that I had never had a book published “the paper
way”.
So
I made sure that my one chance to tell my story must count, when I sat down to
write (The Story of) The Survival of Thomas Ford.
But
the response I received was overwhelming support, not expulsion.
Then,
on April 11th, I published my 2nd blog for AE, A Note
From Frankenstein’s Castle, describing how a 2-day free promotion of The
Survival of Thomas Ford on Amazon Kindle Select had resulted in 17500 free
downloads of the ebook, followed by a further £1000 worth of paid downloads in
the next 7 days, with the book becoming a bestseller on Amazon.
On
the strength of this, I was invited by Orna Ross to make the 600-mile journey
south to appear on an author panel at London Book Fair on April 18th, speaking
on How I Went Indie and Why, along with Linda Gillard, Dan Holloway, and Joni
Rodgers.
This
was the launch event for the Alliance of Independent Authors (and my first trip
to London in 12 years!)
Also
the first time in 10 years I had met anyone else who wrote, or been to any kind
of event to do with writing (not since I’d been asked to read a story at the
Edinburgh International Book Festival in 2002).
It
was good to meet Linda, Dan, Joni, and Orna.
As
the year went on, my work was featured in six articles in Scottish newspapers,
and I was asked to do my first public reading in ten years, which I wrote about
here:
The
newspapers even provided me with my first “spooky” photo:
Meanwhile,
The Survival of Thomas Ford won a Special Award in the eFestival of Words Best
of the Independent eBooks Awards 2012.
It
was also an Alliance of Independent Authors Book of the Month.
And
a Goodreads UK Amazon Kindle Forum Book of the Month.
Following
this, I was invited to take part in a sale in the US, along with 7 other
eFestival of Words award-winning authors (which included David Gaughran’s book,
Let’s Get Digital, which had been another inspiration to me when starting), and
this saw The Survival of Thomas Ford enter Amazon USA bestselling ranks.
In
September, I released my second ebook, Storm Damage, which has recently been described
by The Kindle Book Review as “10 magical modern short stories from a master of
language”.
Perhaps
the most magical thing of all was having the opportunity, through epub, of
getting a short story collection out there in the first place in 2012, with
traditional publishers and agents having turned their back on such books
generally (as I wrote about here, in The Return of The Mighty Atom):
But
now 2012 is almost over…
I
still have my literary agent. He is currently approaching film producers with
The Survival of Thomas Ford.
When
I finish my 6th novel, he will send it out to those publishers in
London and Scotland who had said they “loved” The Survival of Thomas Ford, and
yet had not wished to publish it, but did say they would wish to read my next
novel when it is ready.
In
2013, I’ll also release my third ebook, Agency Woman.
So,
it seems I have gotten away with the first year of epublishing without getting
all my spots knocked off yet!
In May, I wrote a piece from the heart, published here on Authors Electric, called
Fending Off the Next Dark Age:
It
was about my old inspirations, Mikhail Bulgakov, John Kennedy Toole, Giuseppe
Tomasi di Lampedusa…their broken dreams…their broken hearts…the redemption of
their work after their deaths.
As
the year went on, I found myself strangely drawn to film for inspiration, as
though the epublishing somehow tapped in to that 20th century
electric vision…first Kubrick:
And
then last month a roaming across various inspirations from Polanski to Herzog:
Polanski’s
Tenant still will not relinquish his occupation of my pre-frontal lobe, even a
month later.
And
I still have that feeling of some connection between the artistic freedom in
international 1970s cinema, and this new wave of freedom in epublishing.
1970s
films like: Deep End, The Tenant, Celine and Julie Go Boating, Barry Lyndon,
Equus…Solaris…Aguirre: Wrath of God…
They
seem to have in common the very personal working out of an artistic vision or obsession…before the 1980s heralded in an era
of iron corporatism which closed that door pretty firmly, at least publicly,
along with so many other doors.
Time
to open those doors again?
An
epublishing of artistic obsession and unique, personal vision.
Wouldn’t
be such a bad way to enter 2013!
(And a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to everyone when they come!)
Comments
Congratulations on a wonderful year. Just goes to show what talent, hard work and perseverence can do.
Hope 2013 is even better for you.
Best wishes
Margaret
www.superspudtrilogy.blogspot.com
Mike
Have a fab Christmas, followed by yet ANOTHER successful year.
I believe in your stories and in your writing and I feel similarly about my own. I'm getting very close to taking the e-plunge with you. Your post here proves that there is indeed some truth to the adage, "Leap and the net will appear."
John Kennedy Toole's birthday is next Tuesday (Dec 17th), which is appropriate. The traditional publishers miss some really good ones and I'm so glad that the world hasn't missed yours.
Here's to you and to a rollicking, publishing 2013! Cheers, my man.
Hunter
A Blythe Yule an a Guid Hogmanay!!!
-Hunter